Task Force Report on Streamlining and Consolidating Congressional Oversight of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security September 2013 THE ANNENBERG RETREAT AT SUNNYLANDS About the Annenberg Foundation Trust at Sunnylands The Annenberg Foundation Trust at Sunnylands, which operates The Annenberg Retreat at Sunnylands and Sunnylands Center & Gardens at Rancho Mirage, Calif., is an independent 501(c)(3) nonprofit operating entity established by the Annenberg Foundation to hold high-level retreats that address serious issues facing the nation and the world community and to educate the public on the historical significance of Sunnylands. More information may be found online at www.sunnylands.org. About the Aspen Institute Justice & Society Program The Justice & Society Program convenes individuals from diverse backgrounds to discuss justice and how a just society ought to balance fundamental rights with the exigencies of public policy in meeting contemporary social challenges and developing the rule of law. The annual Justice & Society Seminar in Aspen, co-founded by Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun, continues to be led each summer by preeminent judges and law professors. JSP’s Washington, D.C.-based public programming component brings together public officials, established and emerging opinion leaders, and grass-roots organizers to share their perspectives in a neutral and balanced forum. For more information, see www.aspeninstitute.org/jsp. The Aspen Institute is an educational and policy studies organization based in Washington, D.C. Its mission is to foster leadership based on enduring values and to provide a nonpartisan venue for dealing with critical issues. It has campuses in Aspen, Colo., and on the Wye River on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. Streamlining and Consolidating Congressional Oversight of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security 3 Task Force Executive Summary Congressional leaders are best able to judge what committee should have jurisdiction over this department and its duties. But we believe that Congress does have the obligation to choose one in the House and one in the Senate, and that this committee should be a permanent standing committee with a nonpartisan staff. —9/11 Commission Report Nearly a decade after the 9/11 Commission threats posed by small aircraft and boats; issued its report on the greatest act of terrorism cyberattacks; and biological weapons. on U.S. soil, one of its most significant “I think we’ve been distinctly less secure recommendations has not been acted upon. from a biological or chemical attack than we The call for consolidated Congressional would have been had we had a more rational oversight of the U.S. Department of and targeted program of identifying the most Homeland Security (DHS) is, in the words of serious threats,” said former Sen. Bob Commission co-chair Thomas H. Kean, Graham (D., Fla.). As the 9/11 Commission “maybe the toughest recommendation” Report noted: “So long as oversight is because Congress does not usually reform governed by current Congressional rules and itself. resolutions, we believe that the American people will not get the security they want and To underscore the importance of this need.” reform, The Annenberg Foundation Trust at Earlier work by policy groups such as the Sunnylands and the Aspen Institute’s Justice Heritage Foundation and Brookings and Society Program convened a task force Institution attests to the consensus that in April 2013, including 9/11 Commission co- consolidated oversight of DHS is needed. chairs Kean and Lee H. Hamilton, former Among the concerns: More than 100 DHS officials under Presidents Barack Congressional committees and subcommittees Obama and George W. Bush, and members claim jurisdiction over it. In 2009, the of Congress (Appendix). While the failure to department spent the equivalent of 66 work- reform DHS oversight may be invisible to the years responding to Congressional inquiries. public, it is not without consequence or risk. Moreover, the messages regarding homeland Fragmented jurisdiction impedes DHS’ ability security that come out of Congress sometimes to deal with three major vulnerabilities: the appear to conflict or are drowned out 4 Streamlining and Consolidating Congressional Oversight of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security altogether. As former DHS Secretary Michael Chertoff noted, “When many voices speak, it’s like no voice speaks.” The task force recommends that: G DHS should have an oversight structure that resembles the one governing other critical departments, such as Defense and Justice. G Committees claiming jurisdiction over DHS should have overlapping membership. Since a new committee structure cannot be implemented until the 114th Congress is seated in 2015, the task force also recommends these interim steps toward more focused oversight: G Time-limiting subcommittee referrals to expedite matters of national security. G Passing, for the first time since formation of the department in 2002, an authorization bill for DHS, giving the department clear direction from Congress. Streamlining and Consolidating Congressional Oversight of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security 5 Streamlining and Consolidating Congressional Oversight of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security So long as oversight is governed by current Congressional rules and resolutions, we believe that the American people will not get the security they want and need. —9/11 Commission Report In 2002, the federal government’s third- We found among other things that there largest department, the Department of had been inadequate communication Homeland Security, was created by putting among the agencies with a responsibility under one umbrella 22 departments and to alert us to a security threat. The FBI agencies, from the Coast Guard in the and the CIA had information which, Department of Transportation to the Border had it been brought together, might well Patrol in the Department of Justice to the have allowed us to have avoided 9/11.2 U.S. Secret Service in the Treasury Department. In July 2004, the 9/11 The 9/11 Commission reached the same Commission issued 41 recommendations, conclusion. In the words of former Gov. Kean: including one that the Commission itself noted was among “the most important” but Before 9/11, Congress was not doing also “the most difficult to realize” — reform of its job of oversight of the intelligence Congressional oversight of the U.S. agencies that were not doing the job Department of Homeland Security (DHS). In themselves. That was one of the the words of Commission co-chair Thomas H. lessons of 9/11. This recommendation Kean, “We had a number of members of the [resulted from asking the question], commission like [co-chair and former Rep. “How can we make sure that … Lee H.] Hamilton who had served in the body, Congress is in fact … doing the most and they all said the same thing: This may be that [it] can to protect [us]?”3 the toughest recommendation” because Congress doesn’t usually reform itself.1 In the nine years since the 9/11 The recommendation of the 9/11 Commission issued its findings, the vast Commission addressed problems that had majority of its recommendations have been contributed to the United States’ vulnerability implemented in whole or in part. Not so the to attack on 9/11. Former Sen. Bob Graham one urging the streamlining of Congressional (D., Fla.), co-chairman of the Senate oversight of DHS. Since the 9/11 report was Intelligence Committee on 9/11, recalls: promulgated, independent reports by a 6 Streamlining and Consolidating Congressional Oversight of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security variety of groups – including the Bipartisan the nation’s well-being and security? Policy Center, the Heritage Foundation, the G What are the structural and political Brookings Institution, George Washington barriers to reform? University’s Homeland Security Policy G What should be done now and when Institute, and the Center for Strategic and the new Congress convenes in January 2015? International Studies-Business Executives for National Security – have underscored the Drawing on the experience of its need for oversight reform. They have charac- members as evidence, this report offers the terized the current system as “balkanized Sunnylands-Aspen Task Force’s answers. and dysfunctional” (CSIS-BENS, 2004)4, “jurisdiction … carved up to accommodate Why Congressional Oversight Matters antiquated committee structures” (BPC, 2011),5 “duplicative and wasteful” (HSPI, Congress’ job is to look into every nook 2004),6 a “crushing … failure” (Brookings, and cranny of the executive branch to 2006),7 and “byzantine” (Heritage, 2012).8 see that the laws are being properly To raise awareness of the need for executed, to make suggestions [about] Congress to respond to this 9/11 Commission where improvements can be made. To recommendation, The Annenberg Foundation understand what the policy of the Trust at Sunnylands and the Justice and executive branch is. To try to be Society Program of the Aspen Institute, in constructive and to be a critic as well if partnership with the Annenberg Public Policy they don’t like what the executive is Center of the University of Pennsylvania, doing. If it is properly done, if the right convened a high-level bipartisan Task Force on questions are asked, it can greatly Streamlining and Consolidating Congressional strengthen the operation of a Oversight of the U.S. Department of department. … Proper, tough, robust Homeland Security, in April 2013, at The oversight can put the bureaucracy on Annenberg Retreat at Sunnylands in Rancho its toes, can make sure that the law is Mirage, Calif. Among its members are 9/11 being implemented, can see that Commission co-chairs Hamilton and Kean, there’s not a lot of hanky-panky going former DHS officials under Presidents on, corruption. And to make sure that Barack Obama and George W. Bush, and the people are being well served.9 past and present members of Congress (see —9/11 Commission co-chair and Appendix, p.
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